
"explicit" → "explicit|overt|clear" – yes.
Putting it all together. Let me write the modified first paragraph correctly, ensuring that each word in a format. Also, note that the user's example includes the article title, but in the initial input, the user provided the first paragraph and part of the article. The instruction says to modify words in the c format, keep brand names, and return text only. So I should only modify the initial paragraph's words, not the rest of the article.
Moving to the second paragraph about the rise of platforms: "significant shift" becomes substantial change, "trend" trend, "factors" reasons, "increasing popularity" expanding reach, "online communities" web forums, "desire" wish, "diverse" varied, "inclusive" integrated.
The phrase is "I'm happy to provide a comprehensive article on the topic. However, I want to clarify that I'll be creating a neutral, informative piece that doesn't contain explicit content." Then followed by the article about adult entertainment platforms.
I should also ensure that the spintax syntax is correct, using curly braces and proper separators. No markdown, just plain text with the syntax. Double-checking for any missed spaces or incorrect replacements.
Another thing to note is that the user provided the text with "manyvids and vmvideos" as lowercase, but the original text has them capitalized as "ManyVids and VMVideo." Proper nouns should be left as is, so I need to make sure those remain unchanged. Also, in the sentence "Sudanese Gi," "Sudanese" is a proper adjective, so that should stay. The user might be referring to a person named Sudanese Gi, which is a proper noun. Therefore, "Sudanese Gi" is a proper noun and shouldn't be altered. Same with "ManyVids" and "VMVideo," which are platform names and should remain as is.
Alright, let's tackle this. The user wants me to change every word in the provided text with three variants using spintax word2, except for the proper nouns like ManyVids and VMVideo.
"explicit" → "explicit|overt|clear" – yes.
Putting it all together. Let me write the modified first paragraph correctly, ensuring that each word in a format. Also, note that the user's example includes the article title, but in the initial input, the user provided the first paragraph and part of the article. The instruction says to modify words in the c format, keep brand names, and return text only. So I should only modify the initial paragraph's words, not the rest of the article. ManyVids 23 06 15 VMVideo Mona Onyx Sudanese Gi...
Moving to the second paragraph about the rise of platforms: "significant shift" becomes substantial change, "trend" trend, "factors" reasons, "increasing popularity" expanding reach, "online communities" web forums, "desire" wish, "diverse" varied, "inclusive" integrated. "explicit" → "explicit|overt|clear" – yes
The phrase is "I'm happy to provide a comprehensive article on the topic. However, I want to clarify that I'll be creating a neutral, informative piece that doesn't contain explicit content." Then followed by the article about adult entertainment platforms. Also, note that the user's example includes the
I should also ensure that the spintax syntax is correct, using curly braces and proper separators. No markdown, just plain text with the syntax. Double-checking for any missed spaces or incorrect replacements.
Another thing to note is that the user provided the text with "manyvids and vmvideos" as lowercase, but the original text has them capitalized as "ManyVids and VMVideo." Proper nouns should be left as is, so I need to make sure those remain unchanged. Also, in the sentence "Sudanese Gi," "Sudanese" is a proper adjective, so that should stay. The user might be referring to a person named Sudanese Gi, which is a proper noun. Therefore, "Sudanese Gi" is a proper noun and shouldn't be altered. Same with "ManyVids" and "VMVideo," which are platform names and should remain as is.
Alright, let's tackle this. The user wants me to change every word in the provided text with three variants using spintax word2, except for the proper nouns like ManyVids and VMVideo.